Should I stay or should I go? A Nurse Triage Success Story from a Workers Compensation Pool March 7, 2016
presenters Shelley Hall, Claims Manager Michelle Weaver, RN, BSN, MBA, COHN-S, Triage Nurse
agenda Overview of the AZ School Risk Retention Trust pools What is nurse telephone triage? Why did we implement it? How we implemented it Data and results Lessons learned/keys to success
Overview of the trust The Arizona School Risk Retention Trust, Inc. established in 1986; growth from 5 members to 250 members property and liability School Construction Insurance Pool owner controlled insurance program for construction
Overview of the trust The Arizona School Alliance for Workers Compensation (the Alliance) established in 1996; growth from 17 members to 226 members workers compensation only
Origins of triage Evolved from military battlefields Emergency departments Telephone triage Quality, safety, speed, costeffectiveness
Concept of telephonic triage Fast, comprehensive triage assessment of injury/illness Schmitt-Thompson triage guidelines: decision support tool for telephone care providers Operating within the nursing scope of practice
triage process
Decision to move forward Control over program development and implementation Hiring decisions: staffing in-house triage program with qualified telephonic and QA nurses
Decision to move forward Additional value-added service for members/member employees Alliance nursing and other staff remaining the members first point of contact Choice of triage software and ability to customize
Decision to move forward Ability to obtain after-hours and multilingual services needed for 24/7 triage operation Control over program analysis, results
implementing nurse triage Phase 1 Triage tools Triage software and customization Phone recording software and call storage After-hours/weekend triage coverage Multilingual triage services
implementing nurse triage Phase 2 Quality Assurance Protocols Development of triage workflow, procedures, and practices Hiring qualified phone nurses and QA manager Fonemed clinical educator and clinical supervisor: additional resources
implementing nurse triage Phase 3 Baseline data analysis pre-program implementation Establishing measures of program results
implementing nurse triage Phase 4 Program implementation training plan and documents/tools Pilot program with three member districts: 8/1/13 Rolled out in groups of 25 30 members Full implementation: 6/30/14
implementing nurse triage Phase 4 (cont.) Communication with/education of members Webinars, in-person training, PowerPoint, triage-related posters
poster
Wallet card
implementing nurse triage Ongoing Member training Continued program improvement, enhancements, and QA oversight
Triage nurse qualifications Registered Nurse Experience: critical care, emergency department, occupational health, orthopedic Critical thinking skills and ability to quickly assess, and prioritize
Triage nurse qualifications Excellent verbal and written communication skills Documentation skills Office skills: proficiency with data entry, telephone skills, multi-tasking Bilingual preferred
Triage nurse duties Nurse Practice Act Triage of clients Documentation Follow-up calls Quality control
QA supervisor qualifications BSN or higher Experience Teacher/mentor Customer service Leadership
QA supervisor duties Evaluation of triage nurses Making changes and improvements to protocols Education/research to triage nurses Compliance Liaison
Benefits of nurse triage Employee Provides injured employee with immediate access to nurse to assess appropriate level of care Minimizes lost productivity and lost income for injured workers able to treat at home
Benefits of nurse triage Employee (cont.) Minimizes unneeded wait times at healthcare facilities Facilitates more timely claims reporting and handling
Benefits of nurse triage Employer Reduces number and cost of workers comp claims Minimizes loss of workforce productivity Minimizes need for member staff to make medical treatment judgements
Benefits of nurse triage Employer (cont.) Facilitates timely claim reporting and handling Decreases administrative responsibility for claim reporting
Overall Data Program data 164 of 226 districts have used telephone triage 9,037 triage calls 3,727 triage calls, or 41% of calls, resulted in home care advice* *Approx. 3% of these eventually receive medical care
Program data Average of Triage Calls Annually: 3,700 Monthly: 310 Monthly by nurse: 90 Calls to Alliance nurses: 85% Calls to Fonemed nurses: 15%
Program results Compared to what? problem Evaluation underway: preliminary indications of savings on medical claims
Lessons/keys to success Finding the triage software that meets your needs Finding qualified triage staff (nursing + office skill sets) Establishing and testing call recording functionality
Lessons/keys to success Initial and ongoing education of members (when to call) Extra steps for 24/7 coverage: additional contract/partner for overflow triage and/or multilingual services Establishing and documenting analytics to measure program success before implementation
CONTACT INFO Shelley Hall Claims Manager 333 East Osborn Road Phoenix, AZ 85012 shelley.hall@ashtontiffany.com Tel 602.200.2457